Cookie Policy
Euphoria Sounds Cookie Policy
Last Updated: Jane 1, 2026
1. What are Cookies?
Cookies are small text files stored on your device that help us recognize you. At Euphoria Sounds, we use them to keep you logged in, remember your music preferences, and understand how you interact with our platform.
2. How We Use Them
We don’t just use cookies to be “techy”—they serve four specific goals:
- Essential: These make the site work. They handle your login, your shopping cart, and security (like preventing fraud on payment forms).
- Functional: These remember your settings, like if you prefer a dark mode interface or a specific volume level.
- Analytics: These tell us which tracks are trending and if a page is loading slowly in certain parts of the city or country.
- Advertising: These help us show you relevant Euphoria Sounds promos on social media.
3. Your Privacy Choices (US & New York)
Because we value your privacy, we provide several ways to opt-out:
- Our Privacy Toggle: Click the “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link in our footer to disable tracking and marketing cookies immediately.
- Industry Opt-Outs: You can use these US-based tools to opt-out of interest-based ads from hundreds of networks at once:
- Global Privacy Control (GPC): If your browser sends a GPC signal, we automatically honor it as a request to opt-out of “sharing” your data for advertising.
4. Third-Party Partners
We use trusted US-based service providers to help run our site, including Google Analytics for performance, Stripe/Braintree for secure payments, and Cloudflare to keep the site fast and secure in NYC and beyond.
Why the “Do Not Sell” link?
Even if you aren’t literally “selling” data for cash, US laws (like California’s CCPA) define “selling” or “sharing” broadly enough to include using a Facebook or Google pixel for ads. Having that link keeps you legally safe.
Next Step: Since you’re in NYC, would you like me to draft a “Terms of Use” section specifically covering Sales Tax for digital goods or Subscription Cancellation rights (which are very strict in NY)?